1.0.2 • Published 5 years ago

git-bulk v1.0.2

Weekly downloads
29
License
-
Repository
github
Last release
5 years ago

Perform operations on git repositories in bulk

In the real world, we often work with multiple git repositories in a single project. Changes may span across repositories and multitasking can force us to manage branches across multiple repositories as well. The goal for this project is to make managing changes and branches across multiple repositories easy.

At the moment, it makes assumptions based on my own workspaces: a project single root with many repositories in a src folder. If you want to customize this behavior then you can add a .gitbulkconfig file. See the Configuraiton section below.

Installation

git-bulk can be installed through npm.

npm install -g git-bulk

Configuration

In the directory or directories where you intend to run git bulk from create a new .gitbulkconfig file in following format:

module.exports = {
    // Either define single root containing all repositories
    "repositoryRoot": "./projects"

    // Or define each repository explicitly
    'repositories': [

        // List multiple repositories using just their absolute paths
        './projects/Project1'

        // Or define additional properties for some or all of the repositories
        {
            name: 'ShortName',
            path: './projects/LongNameProject',
            group: 'front-end' }
    ]
}

Operations git-bulk help <command>

These are the supported operations. It is assumed that git-bulk will be executed from the project root. Most of these commands also support targeting subsets of the repositories as well, which looks like git-bulk status ./src/Repo1 ./src/Repo2 Repo3. Repository names can be specified as directory names or paths. For more information on these commands, run git-bulk help <command>.

git-bulk help - Show the help menu with a list of all possible operations.

git-bulk status - Execute git status on all of the repositories that have any changes, where a change can be modified files, committed files, or being ahead/behind of the tracking branch. Names are color coded as well. Repository names will be green when they have no uncommitted changes and they are ahead of the remote, blue when there are uncommitted changes, and red when they are behind the remote.

git-bulk fetch - Execute a git fetch on each of the git repositories. Each repository name will be printed, along with whether it was successful or not.

git-bulk branch - Execute a git branch -v on each of the gir repositories.

git-bulk log - Execute a git log on each of the git repositories. This will use a condensed, custom graph view to display the log for each repo. Optionally pass -n <number> to change the amount of commits displayed, and -A to show all branches at once.

git-bulk reset - Execute a git reset on each git repository. You can pass a -h or --hard switch as well.

git-bulk checkout - Execute a git checkout on each git repository. Passing -b branchName is mandatory. Passing a -u branchName option will also set a tracking branch when creating branches. This will checkout the branch on the target packages, or create it if it does not exist.

git-bulk rebase - Execute a git rebase on each git repository. The rebase will only affect repos with changes, unless the -a flag is given. If the -i flag is given, then rebase will be run in interactive mode. Repo names/paths can also be specified to run rebase on a subset of repos. The -a flag is still required, even when specifying repo names manually that have no changes.

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